Mexican fans flock to Texas to cheer on Perez

Fans of Sauber Formula One driver Sergio Perez of Mexico watch the third practice session of the U.S. F1 Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas November 17, 2012.
REUTERS/Adrees Latif

AUSTIN, Texas At the first U.S. Grand Prix in five years, there are no American drivers, but Mexico's Sergio Perez is something of a local hero.

The 22-year-old Guadalajara native known as "Checo" has drawn fans to Texas from neighboring Mexico, where there is a passion for Formula One but there has not been a Grand Prix since 1992.

During practice sessions at Austin's Circuit of the Americas on Friday and Saturday, Mexican flags waved from the stands as spectators cheered on the country's most promising driver in more than 40 years.

"I think all of Mexico is proud of Checo Perez," said Liliana Pulido, a fan from Mexico City, who wore a hat with the name of Perez's team, Sauber, and a shirt that said "Sergio" in giant letters.

She said she waited four hours at the U.S.-Mexico border crossing and that everyone in line seemed to be coming to see Perez in Austin, a closer destination than the other cities on the F1 calendar.

Many Perez fans already live in Texas, where nearly one-third of the population is of Mexican origin, according to 2010 U.S. Census data.

"I feel at home because it's so close to Mexico," Perez said of Austin, which is about a 16-hour drive from Mexico City.

He said his friends and family members, including his grandmother, will be in Austin, and that for many of them, it will be their first time to see him race live. Mexican President Felipe Calderon also is expected to attend Sunday's race.

"It was amazing to see so many Mexicans supporting me," said Perez, who struggled in the qualifying session on Saturday, finishing 15th. "I'm definitely very emotional about this weekend and hopefully I can give a good result for the people here."

Perez, who now lives in Monaco, comes from a racing family. His father was a racing driver who later managed a Mexican driver and his brother races, too. Perez left Mexico at age 15 to pursue racing in Germany.

"It was a very difficult place for me, because I went completely alone," he said. "It's been a long journey."

More than 100,000 people showed up to watch him at a Formula One demonstration event in Guadalajara last year. Next year, Perez is moving from Sauber to one of Formula One's top teams, McLaren.

Perez earlier this year became the first Mexican in 41 years to reach the podium with a second-place finish at Malaysia, and returned to the podium with a third-place finish at Montreal and second place at Monza, Italy. In Montreal, Perez supporters were crying and singing the traditional Mexican song "Cielito Lindo," said Luis Alberto Aguirre, a motor sports reporter for Guadalajara's Mural newspaper.

"They lost a generation without a Mexican driver," said Aguirre, who has known Perez since the driver was 6 years old. "We are a country that needs heroes."

Perez has a chance of being his country's first race winner since Pedro Rodriguez in 1970.

More Formula One visitors are expected to come to Austin from Mexico than from any other foreign country, said Steve Alberts, communications manager at the Austin Convention & Visitors Bureau. Four charter flights from Mexico were set to arrive in Austin carrying about 500 fans, said Jim Halbrook, a spokesman for Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, and more Mexican fans are flying to other Texas cities.

At Circuit of the Americas, the first track purposely built for Formula One in the United States, spokeswoman Ali Putnam said that 110,000 tickets were sold and that 15 percent went to non-American buyers, many of them from Mexico.

MANCHESTER IBF world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua said patience would be the key to preserving his perfect knockout run after weighing in almost a stone heavier than American challenger Eric Molina on Friday.

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